AI Article Synopsis

  • Dissolved carbon plays a crucial role in regional and global carbon cycling, but the effects of human activities on its turnover in rivers are not well understood.
  • The study focused on dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in karst rivers, revealing that human actions like damming and land use significantly alter carbon biogeochemistry, leading to increased carbon dioxide production.
  • The findings underscore the need to minimize human disturbances to slow down organic carbon metabolism, which can enhance carbon sequestration in rivers to aid in achieving global carbon neutrality.

Article Abstract

Dissolved carbon (C) provides critical feedbacks to regional biogeochemical processes and global C cycling. Yet to date, the specific pathways of fluvial dissolved C turnover, particularly with human-induced shifts involved, are still poorly understood. Here, we examined dissolved inorganic (DIC) and organic C (DOC), as well as human disturbances i.e., river damming and land use in karst rivers. We show that anthropogenic activities caused unexpected shifts to dissolved C biogeochemistry. Specifically, we found that human disturbances accelerated aquatic metabolism, ultimately causing more river CO generation than fixation. The extended hydrological retention by damming greatly stimulated biological utilization of dissolved C. River DOC was sourced largely from farmland and forest, while land-use fragmentation increased DOC diversity. Artificial dams and land uses intensified the transformations between DIC and DOC within karst environments. Based on these findings, we provided a process-based conceptual model regarding the rapid cycle of active C in karst waters, revealing the associated trajectories of DIC and DOC biogeochemistry. This study suggests that reducing anthropogenic disturbances essentially decelerates organic C metabolism, and therefore promotes riverine CO sequestration in the context of global C neutrality.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2023.120744DOI Listing

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